Michel Côté 1950-2023 | The comedian in six outstanding roles

In the cinema, on television or in the theatre, Michel Côté has marked the imagination of Quebecers with strong roles. Here are six, which bear witness to the actor’s busy career.




Pointu (and many others) in brew





From 1979 to 2017, Michel Côté and his acolytes Marc Messier and Marcel Gauthier gave more than 3,000 performances of the play brew on the stages of Quebec. A record that is not about to be equaled. Among the panoply of characters who followed one another in the tavern decor, Michel Côté interpreted some memorable figures, including Pointu (the very endearing firefighter with a mustache), the homeless Verrue, Ti-Mil and Gérard.

Jean-Jacques, Gérard, Patrice and Serge in Cruising Bar





Michel Côté has proven his status as a chameleon actor in comedy Cruising Bar, where he played four equally pathetic seducers. Their nicknames: the peacock, the bull, the lion and the earthworm. The film, released in 1989, will have a sequel in 2008; Michel Côté will once again put on the clothes of these four men in love!

Jean Lou in The little life





No, Michel Côté was not a full member of the most dysfunctional family that Quebec has known, but he was undoubtedly one of the most colorful guests in the kitsch decor of the Paré. His endearing character of Jean-Lou in the television series The little life (broadcast from 1993 to 1998) will have marked the spirits, and not only for its flamboyant costumes.

Pierre Gauthier in Omerta





The television series, which arrived on Radio-Canada in 1996, was spread over 38 episodes. The public was conquered from the first weeks by the writing of Luc Dionne, but especially by the tandem of actors composed of Michel Côté and Luc Picard in the shoes of two police officers from the squad to fight against organized crime. The series has also been adapted for film.

Gervais Beaulieu in CRAZY





Michel Côté shone in this film by Jean-Marc Vallée released in 2005. He played Gervais Beaulieu, father of five boys, who struggles to accept the homosexuality of his son Zachary, played by Marc-André Grondin. A lover of the music of Patsy Cline and Charles Aznavour, the character played by Michel Côté alone represented all of Quebec in the 1970s.

Jacques Laroche in From father to cop





In the role of the hardened cop and a bit macho Jacques Laroche, Michel Côté counterbalanced the one who played his hypersensitive son, Louis-José Houde. In this comedy by Émile Gaudreault, which landed in cinemas in 2009 (then followed by a second part released in 2017), the slightly toxic father-son relationship was the source of all the gags.


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